Mark Valenti

Mark Valenti
BornJune 29, 1958
United States
OccupationWriter
Alma materStrasberg Theatre Institute
Years active1985 - present
Notable worksMenno's Mind, Like Father, Like Santa, A Honeymoon to Remember, Deadly Debutantes, The Christmas Pageant
SpouseKristen
Children2
Website
www.imdb.com/name/nm0884131

Mark Valenti is an Emmy-nominated American writer known for movies, TV series and novels.

Career biography

Valenti began his entertainment career as an actor with the St. Louis theatrical troupe, The City Players.[1] Moving to Los Angeles, he studied at the Lee Strasberg Theatre Institute[2] under Sally Kirkland and Marc Marno. During this period, Valenti appeared in several LA stage productions, and took roles on sitcoms and soap operas, including NBC's The Facts of Life.

In 1986, Valenti became a production assistant for Steven Spielberg's Amblin Entertainment. Spielberg had initiated a program whereby assistants would be given an opportunity to learn as much a possible in two years, identify a career path, and then move into their chosen field. Valenti segued into a role as Vice President of Development for John Hughes. During his three-year tenure, Hughes produced ten films, including Home Alone, National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation, Planes, Trains and Automobiles, and Uncle Buck.

Having been intimately involved in Hughes' screenwriting process, Valenti left the executive ranks and began writing film scripts himself. His first produced movie, Menno's Mind,[3] starring Billy Campbell and Robert Vaughn, was seen on the Showtime channel. The script was based on a short story he had written as a high school senior. This was followed by a flurry of screenplay spec sales to DreamWorks (Planet Fred), Nickelodeon Movies (Bob the House), ABC Family (Like Father, Like Santa), Hallmark (The Christmas Pageant), and many more.

Valenti was Creative Manager for a team tasked with re-imagining Disney's California Adventure theme park in Anaheim. He also served as Creative Manager for Disney Interactive.

In 1999, Valenti was recruited as Story Editor at Nickelodeon Studios, working with the writing staff of shows like Rugrats, Hey Arnold!, CatDog, The Angry Beavers, and Rocket Power.

In 2000, Valenti was awarded a Platinum record for writing the spoken-word portion of Mannheim Steamroller's The Christmas Angel, signifying over one million units sold.

By 2003, he was back in the role of screenwriter, becoming Head Writer for the Nickelodeon TV show LazyTown. Shot in Iceland on a sound stage in the middle of a lava field, LazyTown debuted as the #1 show for Nickelodeon, and went on to produce more than 75 episodes, seen around the globe. Valenti also wrote and co-wrote lyrics for many of LazyTown's popular songs. For some of the episodes, Valenti was credited as "Noah Zachary", a name he used in honor of his two sons.

In 2022, Mark Valenti was nominated for an Emmy award for STEM Explorers, a PBS show aimed at bringing science concepts to young viewers.

Books

In 1995, Valenti published "The Wonderful Wisdom of Oz - A Stupendous Compendium of Adages, Aphorisms and Axioms", a collection of curated quotes derived from the work of Oz author L. Frank Baum. His next book was "The Hannibal Twist"[4] featuring a now-adult Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn in their continuing adventures. In 2004, he wrote Mannheim Steamroller's "The Christmas Angel",[5] a novelization of the NBC Christmas special of the same name. 2010 saw the publication of the coming-of-age dark comedy, "Last Night at the Monarch Motel",[6] which was optioned by a film production company.


Charitable works

In 1992, Valenti and his wife Kristen created a fundraiser, "Heart of the Matter", held at Pasadena's Ambassador Auditorium, for their friend Barbie York, then-wife of acclaimed classical guitarist Andrew York.[7] Barbie had suffered a severe head injury in an automobile accident, sending her into a months-long coma. The concert they produced was a once-in-a-lifetime gathering of the classical guitar world's greatest players, among them Christopher Parkening, the LA Guitar Quartet, Liona Boyd and The Romeros. The concert netted $25,000 in one night.

In 2016, Valenti's friend and colleague Stefan Karl, who played the villain Robbie Rotten on LazyTown, was diagnosed with Cholangiocarcinoma. Stefan was forced to cancel all work-related activities during his treatment, so Valenti created at GoFundMe[8] campaign which eventually raised nearly $170,000. Valenti also engineered an AMA on Reddit, featuring Stefan - with the help of his wife Steinunn Olina - which led to a live YouTube event in December of that year. The video featured Stefan and others singing "We Are Number One", the song (written by composer Mani Svavarsson) that had become a worldwide meme. The video has subsequently been seen millions of times, and Stefan's YouTube channel has generated more than a million subscribers.

Credits

Film Year Cast
Menno's Mind 1997 Billy Campbell, Bruce Campbell, Robert Vaughn, Corbin Bernsen
Like Father, Like Santa 1998 Harry Hamlin, Megan Gallagher, William Hootkins
The Christmas Angel 1999 Olivia Newton-John, Dorothy Hamill
The Christmas Pageant 2011 Melissa Gilbert, Robert Mailhouse, Edward Herrmann, Candice Azzara
My Wife's Secret Life 2019 Kate Villanova, Jason Cermak, Matthew MacCaull
Santa's Squad 2020 Aaron Ashmore, Rebecca Dalton, Michael Therriault
A Honeymoon to Remember 2021 Edward Ruttle, Rebecca Dalton, Brendan Taylor
Deadly Debutantes 2021 Angelina Boris, Revell Carpenter, Natalia de Mendoza
The Heiress of Christmas 2023 Katerina Maria Vitkoff
Series Year Episode
Back to the Future 1992 "St. Louis Blues"
Totally Spies! 2002 "The Soul Collector"
Rugrats 2003 "Gimme an A"
LazyTown 2004 75 episodes
Kid Fitness 2006 5 episodes
Olivia 2010 "Olivia Takes a Hike"
Gaspard & Lisa 2011 "The Magicians"
Julius Jr. 2014 "The Gummiest Bear"
STEM Explorers 2022 13 episodes
Award Project Year
Humanitas Prize "Hand Me Downs" - Rugrats 1999
BAFTA LazyTown 2006
Emmy nomination STEM Explorers 2022

Professional affiliations

Mark Valenti is a member of The Writers Guild of America and The Academy of Television Arts & Sciences.

References

  1. ^ "17 Mar 1977, Page 17 - St. Louis Post-Dispatch at Newspapers.com". Newspapers.com. Retrieved 2019-03-28.
  2. ^ "The Lee Strasberg Theatre & Film Institute". www.methodactingstrasberg.com. Retrieved 2019-03-28.
  3. ^ "Menno's Mind", Wikipedia, 2018-09-09, retrieved 2019-03-28
  4. ^ The Hannibal Twist - A Tom and Huck Mystery. Retrieved 2019-03-28 – via www.amazon.com.
  5. ^ The Hannibal Twist - A Tom and Huck Mystery. Retrieved 2019-03-28 – via www.amazon.com.
  6. ^ Last Night at the Monarch Motel. Retrieved 2019-03-28 – via www.amazon.com.
  7. ^ "Guitarists in Benefit at Ambassador". Los Angeles Times. 1992-04-01. ISSN 0458-3035. Retrieved 2019-03-28.
  8. ^ Goi, William S. (2016-12-13). "In 2016, a meme turned self-aware and helped a cancer patient". Medium. Retrieved 2019-03-28.